Jennifer Lawrence and a New Poster for ‘HOUSE AT THE END OF THE STREET’ Comes out of Hiding

It’s almost impossible not to know who the blonde beauty Jennifer Lawrence is.  If you like arthouse films, she scored an Oscar nom a few years back with Winter’s Bone.  If comic book films is more up your alley, she slathered on the blue make-up to play the young Mystique in last year’s X-Men: First Class.  Though she really wasn’t seen on screen in the prosthetics and make-up for that long, but that’s neither here nor there.  Now, if you enjoy adaptations of popular book series’, than you may have heard of a film that she can currently be seen in entitled The Hunger Games.  Given that the film has made 356 mil. in the US as of yesterday, it’s safe to say that many of you have heard of the film if not seen it a few dozen times.  Later this year Lawrence will be trying to survive her neighbors in the horror feature House at the End of the Street.  CinemaCon 2012 recently debuted a number of new posters and imagery for some upcoming films.  One of which is the first poster for the anticipated thriller.  The sepia colored image calls to mind the color aesthetic and compositions that were used for the posters and DVD covers of Wrong Turn and The Hills Have Eyes remake.  While at the same time, it also illustrates a sense of claustrophobia that highlighted the first image (seen above) that was released for the film and will most likely be a theme in the film as well.  Feast your eyes on the new poster below.  The films is set to invade theaters on September 21.

 

A mother and daughter move to a new town and find themselves living next door to a house where a young girl murdered her parents. When the daughter befriends the surviving son, she learns the story is far from over

 

Source: Collider

Somewhere between growing up on a steady diet of Saturday morning trips to the local comic-book shop, collecting an unhealthy amount of action figures, and frequent viewings of Ray Harryhausen and Hammer Horror films, came forth a nerdy boy that was torn between journalism and the arts. In high school, Michael found himself writing a movie column for the school newspaper. Yet, he went on to get a BFA in Studio Art at Webster University. When not writing about films, you can still find him discussing classic horror, collecting action figures, and reading Batman. Clearly, not much has changed.

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